The Bulgarian Association of University Women (BAUW) began to focus on the idea that if women became full citizens, they could hold positions in the government and the legislature. This idea added another important goal to the political feminism agenda of the BAUW. Before 1919, there were smaller organizations, such as the Equal Rights Union (Ravnopravie) and the Bulgarian Women’s Union, that also worked for women’s rights.
Criticism of the Electoral Laws
The Lawyers’ Section of the BAUW strongly criticized the electoral laws of the authoritarian regime (1937-1938), which allowed some women to vote, but only if they were “legally married mothers.” The Lawyers’ Section argued that it was unfair to link a woman’s ability to vote to her marital status or whether she had children. They also pointed out that this law unfairly excluded women who were unmarried, childless, or mothers who adopted children. Despite these criticisms, the laws were enforced, but they still did not allow women, including married women, to work as lawyers Travel Bulgaria.
Challenges Faced by Women Lawyers
For example, in 1938, the Supreme Council of Lawyers and the Supreme Cassation Court took away the permission that allowed Dr. Vera Zlatareva to work as a lawyer. Dr. Zlatareva was the Secretary of the Lawyers’ Section and had been granted this permission by the Sofia Council of Lawyers. The Supreme Council claimed that she could not work because of her connection to the banned Communist Party. In the next year, the Police removed her from the Lawyers’ Section, even though she had the professional rights to continue working.
Situation of Women Lawyers Before World War II
By the time World War II began, Bulgaria and Albania were the only countries in the Balkans where female law graduates were not allowed to serve as judges or defense lawyers. Women in other countries, such as Greece (1926), Yugoslavia (1927), Turkey (1928), and Romania (1929), had already been granted these rights.
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